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I’m getting the sense that my cold crashes aren’t as effective as they could/should be...

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ryanj

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I ferment in an Anvil Bucket Fermentor which is inside my temp controller chest freezer. My probe is attached to the outside of my fermentor wall.

When I cold crash, I set the temp to 36, and once it reaches that point, I wait 24 hours and then keg.

Given the fact that I’m measuring ambient air, is that cold enough? Or is the 24 hour wait long enough?

Reason I ask is that I feel like while a lot of solids “settle out”, I’m still getting some that show up in the first few pints. 2 batches ago I used 2oz of dry hops and wound up with a clogged dip tube (when clocked to the 3 o’clock position).

Should I be going colder and waiting longer before kegging?
 
It takes as long as it takes. Often depends on the yeast strain. You could add gelatin.
 
You should put some insulation over your probe, so you're measuring closer to wort temp rather than wort/air average. I usually gelatine a day after it hits 4°C and keg a day later. I still get some junk in the first few pours.

Are you dry hopping with a bag or a strainer? That helps.
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Depending on your kegging technique you might be sucking too much trub from the bottom of the fermenter too.
 
I’m usually pretty patient during this part of the process. I cool to around 50 the first step and add gelatin then let it crash to 34 degrees over 2 to 3 days. I also added a small computer fan to get the air moving when the cooling cuts in. Insulation around the probe is a great tip.
 
I have problems with this, too. I cold crash overnight at 32, usually. I then add gelatin and leave it cold for up to 3 days. Given that people only do overnight, sometimes without gelatin, you'd think it would be crystal clear. It seems safe to assume it's more clear than it would be if I didn't do any of this, but based on what I read here, my results are not what they should be. Note: the beer always clears eventually.
 
You should put some insulation over your probe, so you're measuring closer to wort temp rather than wort/air average.

I forgot to mention -- I do have a small piece of styrofoam that I place over the probe so it's a little closer to the actual wort temp. I don't think it makes a huge difference but it's better than nothing.

Note: the beer always clears eventually.

That's what I've noticed with all of my batches. Even with a cold crash, the beer tends to be a little cloudy for the first 20-30% of the keg. The last 60-80% always become crystal clear (depending on grain bill of course).

I assume that's somewhat normal?
 
I dont cold crash very often, but when i do i chill it overnight. Add jello and then let it sit two or three days more. Iirc it can take a week to clear perfectly. If just cold crashing maybe need a few weeks?
 
I just tried cold crashing (w/ gelatin) at 32F for a week. That seems to have made a big difference compared with my previous 2-3 day method. It's not perfectly clear, but I expect it to continue clearing until it is.
 
I crash to 45°, add gelatin, and then continue to crash to 38° (summer) or 32° (winter). Seems to work pretty well in settling out yeast and hops.
 
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